Soundboard No. 25 - Church Music Dublin
Transcription
Soundboard No. 25 - Church Music Dublin
SOUNDBOARD DECEMBER 2011 1 SOUNDBOARD CHURCH MUSIC AND MUSICIANS THE MAGAZINE OF THE DUBLIN & GLENDALOUGH DIOCESAN CHURCH MUSIC COMMITTEE Surveys and new beginnings We wish all our readers a peaceful and joyful Christmas and plenty of good musicmaking. It is just over 20 years since the dioceses set up the Church Music Committee. From the outset, the provision of training and information has been the core of our mission. We also have given thought to the position of the musician in the local church and have worked to build up a sense of community amongst church musicians. From time to time the Committee has stood back a little and reflected on what it has done, what it has achieved and, perhaps, noted what has not gone so well. “Even if we appear to be successful, are we doing the right things?” has been a regular question. ISSUE 25 DECEMBER 2011 IN THIS ISSUE MICHAEL MCGLYNN on the music of the Irish church … 2 DES COX on being a reluctant parish church musician … 3 THE I.C.M.A. SUMMER SCHOOL at NUI Maynooth … 6 Recently, we have felt the need for some firm quantitative data about music in parish churches. A Survey of Church Music in the dioceses of Dublin and Glendalough was carried out early in 2011. The data was gathered, in the main, using an online questionnaire and covers all 103 churches in the dioceses. The results are summarised on pages 7 and 8 and some initial reflections and recommendations follow on pages 9 and 10. We hope all clergy and musicians will study these pages closely, because there is much material here for future discussion, both locally and at a diocesan level. The Committee extends its deep thanks to Hon. Secretary Jacqueline Mullen, and Paul Mullen (St Patrick’s, Greystones) for their expert and thorough work in seeing the project to an end and analysing the data. Elsewhere in this issue there is information about appointments of musicians to various church positions. In both St Anne’s Cathedral, Belfast and Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, young professional musicians will start work in the New Year. Even in the present challenging economic climate, it is heartening to know that our major cathedrals continue to earmark resources for the provision of fine music to help offer prayer and praise to the Triune God on behalf of the entire diocesan faith community and to uplift those who are present at the worship. The Royal School of Church Music has made a number of attempts over the past 40 years to have an input into parish church music in Ireland. The RSCM is a deeply respected, effective organisation throughout the Englishspeaking world and no longer is the Anglican-orientated body that it was in the past. We wish the new RSCM Ireland Co-ordinator, Mark Bowyer, every success as he takes up his position and are heartened by his realisation (page 13) that if the RSCM is to gain an enduring foothold in Ireland, it must to a considerable extent allow itself to be assimilated by the local culture. BRIAN MCIVOR on a new recording at St Bartholomew’s … 11 OUR SURVEY SAID … 7-10 NEWS FROM THE RSCM … 13 DEREK VERSO on a restored organ for Killodiernan … 14 MUSICIANS ON THE MOVE … 16 DEREK SEYMOUR looks at Liszt … 12 YOUR SOUNDBOARD … 15 2 SOUNDBOARD DECEMBER 2011 Spirituality in Irish church music MICHAEL McGLYNN, founder and musical director of Anúna, on his upbringing and work in Irish church music I was brought up as a Roman Catholic. My parents endeavoured to give me every opportunity to be exposed to a vast range of music, strongly encouraging our explorations, be they rock or classical music. In school the main exposure to singing was musical drama in the form of Gilbert and Sullivan with a few hymns in unison at every church service. It is understandable, therefore, that when my first exposure to sacred choral music at last arrived at age nineteen in University College Dublin Chamber Choir, it was like being hit with a mallet on the head. I clearly remember my first rehearsal. We sang two songs, Christus Factus Est by Anerio and O Sacrum Convivium by Messiaen. Suddenly much was made clear to me. Maybe this was why people still spoke fondly of the extinct Latin Mass, with its remote and mysterious ceremony? It also helped explain to me why services were structured as they are. Music wasn’t simply a chance for the congregation to sing together, rather it was a series of sonic signposts angled towards illumination of the underlying spiritual truth of the service. The Latin language, with its soft and non-percussive sound, had a natural affinity to the music that it was carried by. Later I discovered the music of Tallis, Gibbons and Byrd, being struck by the beauty of the harmonic language and the mellifluous use of the less-musical English language. Simple, direct statements of belief were woven into a powerful lattice of spiritual affirmation. Exposure to more recent music written for the Church today plainly showed that composers are acutely aware of their musical ancestry and quite capable of working within the practical constraints of service structures and the capabilities of the performing groups that they compose for. Indeed, the love of singing contemporary music among the better choral groups was a great pleasure to behold, even if much of the music demanded skills that were just on the edge of what the singers were capable of. With respect to my Roman Catholic upbringing, I had rarely understood how the odd hymn here or there and the simplistic one-line responses and calls in the vernacular could compare to the carefully constructed musical structures that I participated in while singing in my first Church of Ireland services. It irritated me that much of what was musically beautiful in the pre-Vatican II church had simply been consigned to performance repertoire, rarely heard within its originally conceived context. Sometimes I felt like a starved man who eats as much as possible very quickly, deputising and singing at the two major Church of Ireland Cathedrals in Dublin, St. Patrick’s and Christ Church Cathedrals as often as I could. I sang for free at weddings, funerals, services – anything I was asked to do simply to experience this music in the context of its original conception. By this time I was beginning to compose on a regular basis. While the main thrust of my composition was towards the development of a new form of Irish choral music, I was consistently drawn to spiritual texts. Two early efforts I wrote for competitions organised for use in the Church of Ireland service were Codhlaim go suan id’ chroí” (I Sleep Softly in Your Heart) and the anthem Come Let us Sing the former for a competition to find an anthem in the Irish language and the latter a setting of a more traditional Church text. This work eventually gave rise to my Celtic Mass, a combination of texts in Latin and Irish on diverse texts. Latterly my spiritual output has included the four Tenebrae Responsories, a Missa Brevis for St David’s Cathedral in Pembrokeshire, Wales and a diverse collection of individual sacred works that include my Agnus Dei which was commissioned by the American choir Chanticleer in 2006 for their five-composer project And on Earth, Peace: a Chanticleer Mass. Despite it being nearly thirty years since I was so profoundly influenced by this music, it continues to be a part of my life. I attend regularly at Saint Bartholomew’s Church in Dublin which has a fine and ambitious musical programme. I continue to write spiritual music and I suppose that such an early obsession is often carried through life. There are some things that I have noted over the years, some observations that I would like to share. The first is the huge community value of choral music. In churches that have a strong choral infrastructure, there is a sense of the presence of the community. So many people are needed to make a choral group function properly, particularly when young people are involved. The essence of this music is that it brings a congregation together, and in this day-and-age it must also reach further out to the greater population, not just those that attend services. I believe that the power of community singing of good quality has a ripple effect on the entirety of society. This power should never be taken for granted. Those that see music in services as a purely functional religious device need to educate themselves better. Also those that see the choir as being a finite body, there simply for the singers or conductor are similarly incorrect. This music and literature has survived because its function is far beyond this. There is nothing wrong with aspirations to create “art”, but do remember that the composers who have written this music for a millennium usually did so with the desire to transmit genuine and heartfelt spiritual insight to a congregation. Michael McGlynn was born in Dublin in 1964. His harmonic language combines elements of traditional Irish music such as modal melodic lines and ornamentation, fixed and shifting drones and jazz-tinged chordal clusters. In 1987 he founded the Irish choral group Anúna, which has released fifteen albums, almost exclusively featuring his arrangements and original works. He is a filmmaker, with his début self-produced and directed film "Invocations of Ireland" being broadcast across Australia and New Zealand. He lives in Dublin with his family where his interests include sea swimming, horse riding and procrastination. info@anuna.ie SOUNDBOARD DECEMBER 2011 3 Hymn Tunes in Lower Keys Kevin Mayhew. ISMN M570 421 107. Published July 2011. £25 approx. Every organist knows the congregation mantra, ‘we can’t sing up there!’ and not everyone has the skills to immediately transpose tunes down a tone or even two. Here’s the answer: a Kevin Mayhew mega collection which in many cases gives two or even three different keys for 314 hymn tunes. The result: your congregation will be delighted that the organist has come down to their level! One More Step Along The World I Go (or Starting Again From Scratch…) DES COX on his unlikely and reluctant appointment, and unexpected experiences, as a Dublin church musician In writing this article, I constantly hear the words of Sydney Carter’s hymn One More Step Along the World I Go in my head. Especially the plea “Give me courage when the world is rough”! What do you do when you abruptly take over as church organist, having sought unsuccessfully to convince the Vicar that you are not an organist; in a church with a relatively elderl y congregation, with just about no choir, and with little active participation in worship? From the old things to the new… I moved into the area in 2002 from Dalkey, where from childhood I had been a member of a very active church choir in St Patrick’s Church. My brother Neville had been organist in the church, and I would play an odd service in his absence, gradually getting used to using the pedals and the various stops, relying on luck and a reasonably good ear. On moving into my new parish, I took the brave decision not to get involved in anything remotely sounding like commitment. I had done my time giving a regular commitment to church music. That was until an elderly neighbour, whom I had encountered as one half of the choir of St Catherine & St James’s Church, heard me singing to myself while out working in the front garden, and persuaded me to join the church choir. Actually, one doesn’t get persuaded to do anything in Dublin 8. One gets compelled! Where I see no way to go… I thought I would humour my old neighbour for a while before sneaking away from the choir. The Lord works in mysterious ways... In mid-sneak, around 2004, the announcement came that the current organist Kerry Houston was resigning to take up a new employment position. Kerry had been organist in the church for some 20 years, and his loss would be huge. I felt it only right to help out for the couple of months until a new organist was appointed. Seven years later, and I still try to convince myself I’m just helping out… You see, I’m no organist. Certainly I can play the piano, and am currently Musical Director of Dún Laoghaire Musical & Dramatic Society, and ANTHEM Gospel Choir. But a regular Sunday morning slot at the organ? I don’t think so. By this time, my elderly neighbour had passed away and, with me at the organ, my choir was now a very loyal, long-suffering one. The small congregation made it a point to arrive early to get the best seats as far down the back as possible. The Vicar and visiting clergy from St Patrick’s Cathedral ...continued overleaf LIVING WORSHIP 2012 The popular annual Living Worship course in music and worship will be held again on four consecutive Saturday mornings, starting on 14 January The venue will be the hall at Mageough House, Rathmines, beside the Cowper Luas stop. Living Worship considers aspects of church music in a rather wider context than simply playing the organ or singing in a choir. Musicians, clergy, worship planners, lay leaders and members of congregations have always enjoyed these sessions. Practical music skills are not required to take part. Time is given for some singing and the course leaders will be Dean Tom Gordon, Professor John Harper, Canon Gerald Field and Jonathan Rea. Tom Gordon, not for the first time, will pose the question ‘Why do Christians worship?’ and come up with an answer that few will expect. John Harper is a former Director-General of the RSCM, so is well-placed to consider the future of music in the local church. Gerald Field will talk about the work of the Liturgical Advisory Committee and how its work increasingly impinges on musicians and the arts in general. And on the final Saturday, 4 February, Jonathan Rea, Artistic Director of New Irish Arts, Belfast, will lead a discursive session on the role of the music group leader, with a sideways glance at church politics. The course fee is €90; for more information and booking visit www.churchmusicdublin.org or call 087 668 3998 4 SOUNDBOARD DECEMBER 2011 Kate Manning writes: Pipeworks Festival this year took place in Cork, Louth and Dublin, due to the ongoing growth of the Dublin International Organ Competition. It was decided to divide the quarter-finals between the 2010 Henk van Eeken organ in Holy Trinity Church, Crosshaven, and the 1900 Father Willis organ in St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dundalk. Both are superb examples of two very different organ building traditions which allowed competitors to demonstrate their technique and programming skills. To complement this, significant portions of the festival were programmed in both locations, showcasing both instruments and opening up the festival to new audiences. It proved a great success and will be the template for future festivals. The competition attracted entries from all five continents. The final rounds took place at Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin and the prizewinners were—first: Joonho Park (Republic of Korea); second: David Baskeyfield (UK); third: Stefan Donner (Austria). The jury included some of the world’s leading pedagogues as well as recitalists; David Higgs, Jacques van Oortmerssen, Jon Laukvik and David Titterington all gave recitals and masterclasses. The National Chamber Choir and David Adams opened the festival in Crosshaven. Stile Antico made their debut appearance in Ireland as part of the festival, singing at St Nicholas’ Church, Dundalk, along with The Clermont Chorale. Other featured artists in the festival were Malcolm Proud (organ and harpsichord) and Roisín O’Grady (soprano) and David Leigh who played Francis Potts’ magisterial Christus at St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin. An alternatim liturgy was staged in Holy Trinity Church, Crosshaven, featuring movements from Frescobaldi’s Fiori Musicali (1635). Dublin’s three cathedral choirs sang Solemn Vespers on the Feast of St John the Baptist in the Pro-Cathedral with organ improvisations by Dom John Columba McCann interspersed between the choral offerings. Seminars and conferences also featured as part of the festival. Despite the vagaries of the economic downturn and all that that has meant for arts funding in Ireland, Pipeworks put on an interesting and diverse programme which covered the organ in many of its guises: an instrument of worship, a concert instrument, a teaching instrument, an instrument that forms part of our material and architectural culture. 2012 is a non-festival year but plans are in train for a summer school in Crosshaven with Harald Vogel (his first visit to Ireland) and a series of organ recitals preceding the Friday evening NSO concerts in the National Concert Hall, in association with RTÉ Music and the NCH. www.pipeworksfestival.com One More Step… continued from page 3 (the church is the main parish church in the Cathedral Group) did not always consider it necessary to announce page numbers from the multitude of books that were used in the morning service, leading to considerable confusion for the congregation throughout the service. That was, if the congregation could hear the clergy, in the absence of any meaningful sound system. Added to that, the new pointing in the psalter made it virtually impossible for any mere mortal to sing the psalm properly, even on the welcome occasions when a page number was announced. And to cap it all, the organ is located in the south transept of the church, meaning I was obliged to present my back, and therefore my voice, to the congregation. This was not a great starting point. Give me courage…. Round the corner of the world I turn… It’s funny how things go. Around this time, the Vestry decided to undertake a major renovation of the church. This meant that the church was closed for approximately six months. During this time, the services were held in the hall of the adjacent Parish School. And what a change in dynamic was achieved! The congregation no longer sat in favoured pews, but rather in a semi-circle in front of the altar. I no longer played the organ with my back to the proceedings, but rather faced the congregation, sitting at and playing an electric piano. There was no separation distance between the clergy, the music and the people – we were all within a few metres of one another. One thing I had noticed about the music played in the church prior to my taking on this “temporary” role as church musician, was its general inaccessibility to non-musicians. I have mentioned the inherent difficulty in singing of the psalms. However, added to that, hymns had often been chosen which, while beautiful in their own way, were decidedly unfamiliar and difficult to sing. To put it another way, there was simply nothing to encourage congregational singing in the church. Over the period in the school, I chose a limited number of more well-known hymns; in addition, where I wanted to introduce a new hymn, I would firstly play it on the piano, and sing it to the congregation sitting right in front of me. How much more familiar this was to me, given my experience as MD for a Musical Society! And with constant words of encouragement – never underestimate the value of encouragement – the congregation responded, and the volume of, and confidence in, the singing of these familiar hymns increased beyond all recognition. By agreement with the Vicar, we dropped the singing of the psalm and canticles; this meant that, with that particular barrier removed, we could as a group reacquaint ourselves with the beauty of the words. This is still the case, although I am actively exploring the wonderful resource that is Singing Psalms, with the intent of introducing the singing of psalms once again to the church in the very near future. The playing of the piano in the school hall meant that I had an opportunity to do away with voluntaries at the start and end of the service, and instrumental music during the Communion. I freely admit that I do not believe that organ voluntaries contribute to worship. Instead, I began to extemporise the music of the opening and closing hymns. In particular at the start of the service, this meant that the congregation had the melody of the opening hymn fresh in their heads by the time they came to sing it. During Communion, I would sing a solo, accompanying myself on the piano – usually a modern hymn, or a hymn that might not normally be sung (for example No. 711 Surrexit Christus or No. 582 Jesus, all for Jesus), but one which is meaningful and quiet. This always reminds me of the Passion Gospel where we are told that after the Last Supper “they sang a hymn”. This maybe allows a time and focus for postCommunion meditation during The Great Silence. The renovation of the church was a tremendous success. Aside from the beauty of the interior – and it is a stunning place a modern sound and lighting system was SOUNDBOARD installed, which has contributed profoundly to an improved setting for services. However, of more importance to me was the new confidence in expression of the congregation; the verbal responses and singing were louder (I had suggested to my one member choir that she might be more comfortable in the congregation rather than on display up the front, something with which she fully agreed). I continued to alternate between the organ and a new portable piano, with which I could face the congregation, and on which certain hymns, Communion singing, and other music sounds immeasurably better, often being the instrument for which that music was composed. Leap and sing in all I do…. The main word I would use to describe the music, and general participation, in the church now is JOY – with people keen to give their all in word and song. I generally mix older and modern hymns in a service to provide a good mix of music. The volume of singing belies the fact that there is a normal Sunday morning congregation of some 35 people. Over the subsequent years, the congregation has increased with the arrival of young families into the area, and their attraction and loyalty to church activities. Under the wonderful management of Karen Jordan, viceprincipal of the parish school, with some very loyal helpers, there is now a thriving Sunday School. This has allowed us to have a Family Service, led by the children in word and song, every second month. When I arrived in 2002 there was a Sunday School of two children. Who would believe that at our recent Family Harvest Festival, we had a choir of twenty-six children, leading the music in voice and actions, and accompanied in part by the organ and in part by the piano? I have confidence that, with ongoing encouragement, in years to come, we may once again have an enthusiastic and active choir. And leaning on my other contacts in the musical world outside of the church, we have been lucky to have regular visiting choirs – including my own Gospel Choir ANTHEM, and the Unity Gospel Choir of Wicklow – to lead the worship. Often this is with music that is not found in the Church Hymnal, accompanied by piano and percussion, but which offers an alternative and welcome dimension to the service. More and more about the world I learn... DECEMBER 2011 5 All this combines to provide a wonderful and joyful variation to Sunday worship, with little opportunity to grow stale. This has all happened with the oversight, and indeed active encouragement of Canon Mark Gardner, Vicar of St Catherine and St James’s Church. I am grateful to have wonderful support in an assistant organist, Margery Bell (my former last-standing choir member), and Philip Lawton, organist of St Audoen’s, a sister church in the Cathedral Group. This means that, if on occasion I am away on a Sunday morning, Margery or Philip will play the church service; in return, if Philip is away I will play both church services. This makes for a very healthy sharing of skills and consistency in church worship. Perhaps this experience may give some comfort to other church musicians reading this who find themselves in similar circumstances; To approach church music with an open mind, firstly determining, and then playing to the strengths of a congregation, rather than to a set of preconceived ideas; To be willing to try new ideas, but to communicate these first to the congregation, letting them buy into those ideas; Maybe at times to depart from the traditional way of doing things, while not losing the best parts of that tradition; To ensure that there is not an undue reliance on an organist’s or choir’s performance at the expense of congregational participation. And in all things, to approach church music with JOY! It sounds almost silly to think that one of the key revolutions in St Catherine and St James’s has been the provision of a service sheet for a morning service, setting out the wording of the liturgy, including the hymns, readings, psalm and any canticles. This is of course a long-standing practice in other churches, but not in our church. I consider the preparation of service sheets as part of my remit as church musician, and am delighted to produce these weekly. It is incredible how much these benefit participation in worship, where there is no longer a struggle in juggling the various heavy books. It also means that each service can be tailored to a theme or form, rather than having to fit within a set structure. We no longer have a And it's from the old I travel to the new; choir of three or one; we have a choir of keep me travelling along with you. des.cox@eirgrid.com an entire congregation. 6 SOUNDBOARD DECEMBER 2011 Eucharistic Congress The arrival of the 50th International Eucharistic Congress to Ireland in June 2012 brings with it an opportunity that many may have been waiting for. Whilst the Church in Ireland prepares, many are taking stock of the potential the occasion affords and church musicians are no exception. A Eucharistic Congress is in essence an adult faith development initiative and consists primarily of gathering for prayer, study and celebration. The aim is renewal in awareness of the centrality of the Eucharist, of Christ in the life of the Church. The programme of pastoral preparation has been paving the way and it includes contributions from the Revd Ken Rue, (priest-in-charge of the Church of Ireland parish of Killiskey, Co. Wicklow) and others on the richness of the theology and spirituality in Eucharistic hymns. The coming Congress presents choir leaders and church musicians with an opportunity to refresh the parish repertoire with a new common hymnody. It might not be well known, but much of the hymnody currently used in the Catholic Church in Ireland, often referred to as the ‘golden oldies’, is a legacy of the 1932 Eucharistic Congress. Hymns such as Sweet Sacrament Divine, Soul of my Saviour, O Sacrament Most Holy and others were introduced at that time along with the motet Panis Angelicus. Indeed it seems that great events in the life of the Church such as this provide an opportunity to introduce new hymns. The visit of Pope John Paul II in 1979 produced a similar musical outcome. The appointment of a Music Director for the 2012 Eucharistic Congress is imminent, as is the announcement of the Congress music repertoire, which it is hoped will be introduced countrywide. It is likely that this will likely include a mix of hymns that are known, hymns from the international pilgrimage scene and of course the Congress Hymn www.iec2012.ie/hymn. While we reflect on the theological, spiritual and social dimensions of communion with Christ and with one another, congregational singing enhanced with choral harmony is, perhaps its most eloquent expression. www.iec2012.ie The ICMA Summer School MARY DEE reports on the annual summer school, this year themed on 'The Mystery of Faith’ and looking towards the 2012 Eucharistic Congress Opening the summer school, Bishop Brendan Kelly reminded us of the foundation of the Association in 1969 and the first summer school the following year. The opening included the launch of Sing the Mass, a new anthology of Mass settings for the texts of the new edition of the Missal. Launching the new resource, Bishop Kelly quoted the Constitution on the Liturgy of the Second Vatican Council: "Sacred music will be the more holy the more closely it is joined to the liturgical rite, whether by adding delight to prayer, fostering oneness of spirit, or investing the rites with greater solemnity." He remarked that this was what the anthology offered. The new Mass settings were used during the summer school, and these gave an insight to the changes that will happen officially from the First Sunday of Advent this year. Using the settings was helpful and choir leaders discovered that going back to their parish to introduce this new music would not be such a huge task as they had originally thought. The wide variety of music made available to us for all aspects of the Liturgy in the tutorial books was excellent. The work of many composers was used and it was great to see so many Irish names among that list! Whether you have a large parish choir, a small choir, a choir with guitars and other instruments, or just organ accompaniment, the music provided is suitable. The guest director was Órla Barry, back to the summer school for the fourth time. Órla is founder and director of Cantando, a chamber choir formed to explore the choral repertoire from Renaissance madrigals to contemporary works. Órla was director of the Palestrina Choir at the Pro-Cathedral in Dublin from 1996 to 2001. She is a graduate of UCD and the University of Cincinnati, Ohio, where she studied conducting. She is head of music at St Raphaela's Secondary School, Kilmacud, Dublin. The usual range of tutorials that are part of the summer school took place: parish and contemporary music (Liam Lawton and Chris de Silva), choral direction/conducting (Dominic Finn), cantor training (Sarah Waldron), liturgical composition (Edward Holden), organ (Eóin Tierney, Regina Deacy, Éanna McKenna and David Connolly), special choir (Órla Barry), schools (Monica Brown), chant (Giovanna Feeley), music by Irish composers for the new Missal translation (John O'Keeffe and Paul Kenny). The wide range of tutorials available ensured that there was something for everyone each day. The summer school is not just about church music, but also the Liturgy. Before the singing began each morning, Paddy Jones and Liam Tracey provided helpful liturgical inputs. Continuous formation is important in any ministry, and the church music summer school should be an important highlight for anyone in music ministry. During the week, you obtain new material, make new friends, have fun, and above all, praise and worship God together in a spirit of unity through music. If you have never been to the church music summer school, make a date for 2-6 July 2012 in Maynooth. This article first appeared in New Liturgy, summer 2011. Mary Dee is a liturgy resourcer for the Diocese of Waterford and Lismore and a former student of the National Centre for Liturgy. pastoralmail@eircom.net SOUNDBOARD DECEMBER 2011 7 Questions, questions... The Dublin and Glendalough Diocesan Church Music Committee regularly asks itself the question ‘Are we meeting the actual needs of musicians working in parish churches throughout the dioceses and effectively contributing to the promotion of music in worship?’ To help the members of the committee respond to this fundamental question, a survey of music in parish churches was carried out early in 2011: mainly by means of a webbased questionnaire and also by direct contact with clergy and musicians. By the beginning of June, information had been received from all 103 churches in the diocese (quite an achievement!). While it was hoped that musicians and clergy would supply the information jointly, as matters turned out the data was supplied by 68 clergy, 13 musicians, and 4 administrators. The results provide a fascinating snapshot of Anglican parish church worship in the Dublin region in the first decade of the 21st century. What follows are • tables containing the key quantitative findings of the survey, • the Church Music Committee’s initial views about what the data reveals; and • reflections on what steps might be taken to respond appropriately and effectively. The data relates to the 54 parish units in the Dioceses of Dublin and Glendalough, embracing 103 churches. Ethnic origin of Sunday morning assembly Ethnic origin Mainly Irish A mix of Irish and other nationalities Over 50% non-nationals from Europe Over 50% non-nationals from outside Europe Churches 94 6 2 1 103 Table 1 Age profile Age profile ‘Have adults of working age’ Churches 103 ‘Have retired people’ ‘Have primary school children’ 97 78 ‘Have teenagers’ 45 ‘Have babies and toddlers’ 69 Table 2 Sunday worship Average Sunday morning attendance Up to 30 31 - 75 76 - 100 Churches 33 43 15 101-150 7 150 - 200 4 201 and over 1 103 Table 3 An early Sunday morning Eucharist takes place Every Sunday On alternate Sundays Once a month In alternate months At Christmas and Easter only Seldom / never Churches 30 7 4 2 1 59 103 Table 4 A principal Sunday morning service takes place Every Sunday On alternate Sundays Rarely / never Churches 94 5 4 103 Table 5 Evening Service Every Sunday Monthly Occasionally Churches 12 7 8 Rarely/Never 76 103 Table 6 8 SOUNDBOARD DECEMBER 2011 Type of principal Sunday morning service The Eucharist is the principal service every Sunday The Eucharist is celebrated twice a month and Morning Prayer / Service of the Word / Family Service on the other Sundays Family Service takes place once a month Family Service takes place three times a month Family Service takes place twice a month Family Service takes place rarely/never Churches 3 70 40 1 1 61 Table 7 Instruments and singing Lead Musicians Title Total Remunerated Not remunerated Director of music Organist 18 17 1 69 53 16 8 6 2 12 3 9 107 79 28 Choir Director Band Leader Totals Instruments used at principal Sunday services Organ Piano Band Used in Frequency 74 churches 9 churches 6 churches Every Sunday Every Sunday Every Sunday Choir Choir 21 churches 3 churches Every Sunday 3 Sundays a month 2 churches 3 churches 2 churches 2 Sundays a month Every Sunday One Sunday a month 8 churches have a team of musicians. 13 churches use recorded music Table 11 Choirs Type of Choir Choir Cantor Cantor Table 8 Music is selected by Clergy and musician Churches 53 Clergy only Musician only 26 24 103 Adult SATB Rehearse weekly 20 2 Children’s 7 Combined adult/children’s Sunday school 4 2 2 Parish school Singing group Gospel 1 3 4 3 1 42 10 Singing the Gloria in Excelsis, Sanctus, Psalms and Canticles the Gloria in Excelsis is sung regularly the Sanctus is sung regularly Churches to a congregational setting 29 to a congregational setting 27 At the Eucharist no parts of the liturgy are sung regularly The Psalms are sung at all services to Anglican chant 7 The Psalms to Anglican chant 18 to Anglican chant 11 to Anglican chant 2 The Psalms are sung at the Eucharist and Morning Prayer are sung at Morning Prayer only are sung at the Eucharist only are sung to plainchant 2 The Psalms are sung responsorially 5 The Canticles are sung by everyone using Anglican chant 51 The Canticles are sung by everyone using a composed setting 3 The Canticles are sung by a choir using a composed setting 3 The Canticles are sung using a metrical version The Psalms The Psalms 11 3 Table 12 Repertoire At the Eucharist Rehearse occasionally 13 Adult Unison or 2-part Table 9 At the Eucharist Rehearse monthly 51 Table 10 29 Children’s singing • 21 Sunday schools use instrumental accompaniment for singing. • 8 Sunday schools use recorded music for singing • 1 Sunday school uses a Cantor • 10 churches use recorded music for children’s singing Table 13 2 26 SOUNDBOARD Some Reflections and Recommendations The prime job of the parish church musician is to facilitate and encourage the singing of the entire worshipping community Only 1 in 5 churches in the dioceses (Table 8) has a choir that sings every Sunday. It is clear that the number of parish church choirs and the number of singers in them has been falling for many years. It is very difficult to attract new / younger personnel. Most people in our time seek the enjoyment of choral singing by joining a secular rather than a church choir. It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that in most situations the traditional, 4-part, church choir is no longer either a viable or a satisfactory resource for leading the choral aspect of worship. Musicians must increasingly see their role as being to engage with the entire worshipping assembly. The prime responsibility of the organist is to lead the congregational singing. Care should be exercised to ensure that the singing of a choir does not diminish congregational participation. Standards of music performance outside church are now very high and a musically inadequate church choir can distract people rather than encourage them to come to church. It may well be the case that members of a struggling choral group will be more effectively located within the main body of worshippers. In all but a very few places, the priority must be to facilitate prayerful singing by the entire assembly. This can be achieved without a separate choral resource. Sing the ‘Holy, holy, holy Lord’ At the Eucharist, just under 30 churches regularly sing the Gloria in Excelsis and/or the Sanctus (Table 10). The Sanctus (the proclamation of the thrice Holy God we worship) is one of the Judaeo-Christian tradition’s oldest hymns and, arguably, should take precedence of all other hymnody. The Sanctus is entirely scriptural (cf. Isaiah 6.3 and Revelation 4.8) and it offers the opportunity to praise God at a high point in the liturgy. In places where the Sanctus is not regularly sung, clergy and musicians should consider introducing it. Church Hymnal has two versions (Nos. 714 and 715) and a large number of other simple congregational settings are readily available, many of them easily sung without the need for instrumental accompaniment. It should be noted (as Bishop John Neill pointed out some years ago) that when the Sanctus is sung at the end of Eucharistic Prayer 3, the Great Amen that immediately follows, should also be sung. The use of psalms in our liturgy is not optional The survey reveals that the psalms are sung regularly in only 45 churches in the dioceses (Table 10). In a further 42 churches, the psalms are rarely or never used—a fact of which we cannot be proud. The appointed psalm, whether at Morning Prayer or the Eucharist, is an integral part of the liturgy and this should be respected. The psalm also is the carefully chosen people’s response to the Old Testament reading that precedes it. The psalm may be said or sung in various ways (cf. BCP pp. 592-593). In our dioceses, the use of Anglican chant for psalmody in parish churches appears to be confined to churches that have choirs. There are many simpler methods of singing the psalms congregationally, either responsorially or to very simple four-note chant. Instrumental accompaniment is not necessary. Clergy and musicians should explore the possibilities. DECEMBER 2011 9 A growing need for trained cantors as well as organists Only 5 churches in the united dioceses use a cantor, 3 regularly, 2 less often. Many people, particularly those who have experienced Christian worship outside Ireland, comment positively on the role of the cantor. While the responsibility of the organist is to lead the congregational singing, the prime role of the cantor is to facilitate and encourage the worshipping assembly in song; to enable it to lift its voice in praise. In some places, this role is extended to include helping people to develop a new repertoire of song to support their faith. The appointment of cantors is a logical next-step to the recent introduction in the Church of Ireland of psalms sung with refrains (often referred to as ‘responsorial psalmody’). Cantors will require professional training if they are to be effective, and will merit being paid. These developments will impact on the current role of the church organist. All involved in the music of worship need to keep abreast of discussion and thinking generally about such issues. The Church needs well-trained and remunerated musicians Parishes need to understand that a core need is for each church to have a skilled musician who sees their role primarily as a facilitator. It is fundamental to the local church’s stewardship that the musician should be remunerated. If they are unwilling to accept fees, the money should be put aside for the future. This will avoid an unwelcome increase in expenditure when a new musician is appointed. Trained musicians who have responsibility for singing groups, bands and instrumental ensembles in church, like organists, are also entitled to remuneration. To have a ‘volunteer’ musician is not always a good thing. Unpaid staff will sometimes resist even the most tactfully phrased instruction or direction. A paid musician will usually have a more balanced, professional, and honest reporting relationship with their supervisor, the rector. Competence and confidence are the marks of the professional musician—the ability to deliver good-quality music and a confidence in their ministerial role within the body of Christ. In-service training for parish musicians Of the 107 parochial musicians identified by the survey, 79 are paid (Table 11). The diocesan guidelines on the remuneration of musicians make it clear that the recommended rates are contingent on the musician, at all stages of his/her career, engaging regularly in relevant and appropriate in-service training. This recommendation is not being implemented. Clergy need to encourage their musicians to develop their skills so that they continue to be competent and confident in their work and keep abreast of new developments. This issue should be brought to the attention of select vestries. Archbishop of Dublin’s Certificate in Church Music The survey’s findings have clear implications for the syllabus of the course leading to the Archbishop of Dublin’s Certificate in Church Music. It may be necessary to broaden the scope of tuition in leading the singing of psalms; and to place greater emphasis on developing skills in leading hymns and worship songs and working with a range of instrumentalists. Over time, the skills of the cantor may become a significant feature of the training, especially expertise in getting the entire assembly to sing. 10 S O U N D B O A R D D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 1 Musicians and clergy should meet and discuss regularly While definite evidence is not readily available, it is very clear anecdotally that many clergy and musicians do not engage regularly with one another. It is strongly recommended that an uninterrupted meeting of at least one hour be held twice a year at a minimum. This is no more than good management and effective communication. Music in church and young people: reflecting contemporary culture Young people may not wish or be in a position to attend church on a Sunday morning. In 7 churches (both urban and rural) informal weekend evening worship in a contemporary style is held very successfully, followed by supper. Music is usually led by guitar, electric keyboard and other instruments. This is a good example of the imaginative and creative thinking that is required in presenting worship. The nature of music used in the local church has changed dramatically during the last 40 years. People in our times generally listen to a very wide range of high-quality music, using an assortment of modern technologies. Church is one of the only places where the ordinary member of the public is welcome to engage in community singing - therefore such music has to be accessible. As a consequence, church musicians need at all times to be aware of and understand music of the culture outside church. The extent to which such music is brought into the existing worship context is, of course, a matter for each place to work out. Church musicians will find it easier to make right decisions about such matters if they are clear about their role and mission, are open-minded, imaginative and flexible, and seek out from within the faith community the entire range of vocal and instrumental skills available. Young children singing The survey yielded only incomplete information as regards music and children in church. Music for children is well done in places; not so in others. There is some evidence that singing is no longer a regular feature of Sunday Club sessions. How will our children become familiar with even a handful of classic hymns (including classics of the last 50 years) unless they are introduced to these at a relatively young age in school and Sunday Club? It is strongly recommended that a hymn or song that is accessible to children should be sung by the entire worshipping community each Sunday before the children leave church (one with an easy refrain will suit even the smallest child). Joined-up thinking and planning is needed by all involved in music for children in worship. There should be improved and ongoing communication between the Diocesan Church Music Committee and others involved with music for children in church, including teachers in parish schools. A further survey may well be needed focusing exclusively on how children up to Confirmation age engage with music in church and how we might best use the opportunities to pass on our faith in song to the church of the future. ***** These reflections represent the Church Music Committee's initial reaction to this important survey, which it is hoped will stimulate thought and discussion among musicians and clergy throughout the dioceses. Readers are encouraged to send us their comments and observations for publication in future editions of Soundboard. All I Want For Christmas Respondents to the survey were also invited to list their greatest wish for music in their parish church. Analysis of the 56 responses points, in particular, to a widespread desire for: • assistance in finding new members for adult choirs and in establishing choirs for children and teenagers; • musicians, including instrumentalists, with the necessary skills for providing an effective lead to ‘contemporary’ worship; • a greater selection of hymns on CD; • more opportunities for in-service training for organists What are your greatest church music wishes? Part of the full church for Choral Evensong as part of the Carrickon-Shannon Water Music Festival in July 2011, with the choir of St Paul’s Glenageary, Dublin, directed by Derek Verso. The choir was invited to sing in the beautifully restored St George’s Church, with its original William Telford pipe organ built in 1847 being played by Paul Mullen. The church is also a heritage centre that is managed and maintained through a local community agency: an interesting model of how historic buildings can be given new life SOUNDBOARD DECEMBER 2 0 1 1 11 Standby… the house is full of smoke! BRIAN MCIVOR writes about how the choir of St Bartholomew’s, Dublin, goes about making a CD It’s Saturday afternoon and there is a full turnout of the St Bartholomew’s girls' and men’s choirs. However, there is no celebrant and no congregation. What’s going on? The notice on the door outside explains everything: “Recording Today: No Admittance”. Today, a dark afternoon in October with storm weather threatening, the church is being used to record a CD of sacred music – to be ready in time for Christmas. Richard Bannister, who is in charge of the project has spent months planning sessions, aligning diaries and getting people and resources together. He is philosophical about this project. Their last CD project two years ago was delivered in time for Christmas under similar conditions and was featured on RTE Lyric FM on Christmas Day. Richard’s contribution is on the logistics and design side. By day he works in computers so he has designed the CD cover and inlays featuring St Bartholomew’s ornate interior. Producing a CD is a major undertaking for a church choir. As an engineer I have been involved in many projects over the last 25 years and experience has taught me that a choir that is welltrained and organised does well when it records. The standard method is to use the location the choir normally sings in – studios can be intimidating to all but the full-time professional. Half of the singers in St Bart’s have never recorded before but they are excited at the prospect. The repertoire is a varied collection of anthems including some old favourites from St Bart’s – Stanford’s Evening Service in G, a Mozart Mass and a big anthem by John Stainer, a line from which provides the CD’s title: ‘and the house was filled with smoke’. If you know your anthems or the Book of Isaiah), you can work out which one it is. In the vestry, producer Judy Martin is poring over scores and tallying take numbers on sheets. Her job is to ensure that the performances are recorded and logged accurately. Beside her is the intercom on to the floor outside that relays her instructions to Tristan Russcher, the conductor. It is the easiest thing in the world to listen for flaws but Judy’s talent is to encourage and coax the best performance out of the performers. Her extensive experience in conducting choirs and running recording sessions stands to her here. The work requires an intimate understanding of the repertoire and how to tackle the recording of really complex works. “Let’s start with the last item and work back” she suggests – neatly solving potential problems with singing music that requires stamina and concentration. The danger of recording and re-taking is that the singers may become tired and discouraged. A good producer needs to be a good leader with the ability to inspire and Judy has plenty of experience of these types of situations – particularly with younger singers. The knack is to get the piece right early in the proceedings when people are fresh and enthusiastic. There is nothing more discouraging than being asked to repeat something over and over again until it is right. Judy doesn’t create problems in this situation; she solves them. As conductor Tristan Russcher has great experience of both choirs and recording – from when he worked in Christ Church Cathedral on similar projects. He has chosen and planned the repertoire carefully. He has to energise and focus his singers. Organists Peter Parshall and David Grealy support the process with accompaniments that provide a wide range of colours and textures. Singing and playing for a recording differ from providing music during a service, where the focus is on supporting the liturgy. Here the challenge for them is remain consistent and fresh and adapt to what the singers need. “Can you give me more on the 4-foot?” Tristan asks Peter – to help the singers to stay on time in a tricky passage. This wouldn’t happen during a service! There are moments of tension when judgement is awaited as to whether a particular anthem is in the bag. Occasionally, there are odd moments of hilarity when the intercom is left on at the wrong moment and a stray remark gets a greater audience than originally intended. There is great hilarity when the very first take on the first night is announced as ‘take 68’ – this has to do with the fact that we are recording on to hard disc and file numbers are critical. As engineer-in-charge I resolve to do something about my numbering system in future. My domain is the collection of microphones, cables and black boxes strewn around the place. When the recording is done my job is to edit all the takes into 78 minutes of music. This process involves Tristan, Richard and myself in front of a computer screen for days at a time. Fortified by strong coffee, chocolate biscuits and occasional breaks for fresh air we pull the final product together in time for the duplication deadline. What are the four magic words a recording producer can say to a roomful of performers that will have them on their feet cheering? “It’s a wrap, folks!” You can judge for yourself on 12 December when the CD is issued. You may order it on-line from www.stbartholomews.ie/node/418 Brian McIvor has been involved in recording choral and organ music since 1985, when he set up SDG Recordings, which specialises in this repertoire. A number of his projects have been awarded multiple platinum discs and he has produced music documentaries for Lyric FM. Brian also works as a management consultant and is organist of St Patrick’s Church, Slane. brianmcivor@gmail.com 12 S O U N D B O A R D D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 1 Soundboard snippets REMUNERATION GUIDELINES The recommended fees for church musicians for 2012 are the same as for the last three years. The detailed schedule can be found on our website at www.churchmusicdublin.org/fees SOUNDBOARD SUBSCRIPTIONS It is clear from letters and emails we receive that Soundboard is valued by those who read it. In view of rising costs we now ask readers for an annual subscription - €15 or £13. There was a good response to our request earlier this year. If you have not yet sent a sub for 2011, we hope you will now do so. Cheques may be posted to Church Music Committee, 18 Villiers Road, Dublin 6. Existing subscribers will be asked to renew their subscriptions from February 2012. Should anyone wish to pay by credit or debit card, please call 087 668 3998 and have your card details to hand. DO WE HAVE YOUR CORRECT EMAIL? Please let us know if you change your email (or postal address), or if you are in any doubt that we already know your email. Simply send a message with the correct details to info@churchmusicdublin.org WHO’S ON THE CHURCH MUSIC COMMITTEE? Archdeacon Ricky Rountree (chair), Jacqueline Mullen (Hon. Secretary), Maedhbh Abayawickrema, Judy Cameron, Ann Keary, David McConnell, Donald Maxwell, James Pasley, Derek Verso, Fraser Wilson. DEPUTY ORGANISTS As usual, the list of deputies is printed in the 2012 Dublin Diocesan Directory, and is also available on our website. This resource is of use to anyone who finds themselves in need of a deputy! There have been quite a few changes over the past year; we ask all th ose listed to check their details and inform us of any changes. Organists are always welcome to send details to info@churchmusicdublin.org Franz Liszt visits Dublin DEREK SEYMOUR reflects on the famous figure’s month-long tour of Ireland Morrison’s Hotel at the corner of Dawson Street overlooking Trinity College Park was the base camp for an eclectic group of musical entertainers visiting Dublin in late 1840. The group would have been considered unremarkable but for its inclusion of the pianist and composer Ference (Franz) Liszt (1811-1886). As this is the bicentenary of Liszt’s birth it’s appropriate to reflect on perhaps some little-known aspects of his visit to Dublin and his concerts given while in Ireland. Liszt had been engaged by the young impresario Lewis Henry Lavenu to undertake a series of concert tours the second of which brought him to Ireland. Arriving in Dun Laoghaire (Kingstown) from Liverpool on 16 December 1840 an intensive program of events had been arranged by Lavenu running through to 19 January 1841 when the party moved on to Scotland for their next series of engagements. The ensemble comprised Lavenu (accompanist and conductor), John Orlando Parry (baritone, pianist and comic song writer), Louisa Bassano (contralto), Miss Steele (soprano) and her mother Mrs Steele, Joey Richardson (flautist) and the acclaimed Franz Liszt who took every opportunity to promote Erard pianos having had an instrument specially shipped to Ireland in advance of his performances. The group recruited the assistance of Joseph Augustine Wade (a minor Dublin composer of the day) who proved unreliable in arranging supplemental concerts and their coach driver Marchant who ferried them around the country at break-neck speed visiting Cork, Kilkenny, Clonmel, Fermoy, Cobh, Roscrea, Drogheda, Newry and Belfast from their base in Dublin. Financially the Irish tour was disastrous with Liszt personally said to have lost a lot of money on the venture. The difficulties lay in the poor attendances at concerts outside of the capital city. The Dublin concerts however were successful mainly taking place in the Rotunda concert rooms where society attendances of 1,200 were achieved. Programmes included contributions from local musicians but were dominated by the visitors. Some of the concerts were very much ‘light entertainment’ with Parry delivering many his recently published comic songs and being critical of the heavier (and lengthy) chamber and classical repertoire. Liszt played a relatively minor part in the programs contributing just two or three piano solo items. On occasions he accompanied vocal and instrumental performers. One of the main Dublin events in aid of the Anacreontic Society, an amateur orchestral society featured Liszt performing just two piano solo items Rossini’s William Tell, and Weber’s Concertstuck within an extended two part concert programme. This concert included items by popular Irish composers of the day M Balfe, JP Knight and JA Wade. Where audiences were particularly appreciative, Liszt gave impromptu extemporisations on Irish tunes including Rory O’More and the Last Rose of Summer. The month-long stay in Ireland which included the Christmas holiday saw the visitors sample Dublin tourist highlights including the Museum and Library at Trinity College with the Book of Kells, The Abbey Theatre, St Stephen’s Green, shopping in Grafton Street and a visit to Piggott’s, the music sellers. Liszt himself, always keen to impress the aristocracy, had personal audiences with local dignitaries including Lord Morpeth, the Chief Secretary in Ireland at the time. Having his first experience of Ireland when he arrived in Kingstown (as it then was) in 1840 it befits the bicentenary year that this year’s Dún Laoghaire concert series included music by Liszt. Featured items included major works such as the Prelude and Fugue on BACH, and the Fantasie and Fugue on the Choral ‘Ad Nos ad salutarem undam’ as well as some smaller-scale works worthy of our appreciation. Derek Seymour is music director at Methodist Centenary Church, Leeson Park, Dublin. seymourdw@eircom.net SOUNDBOARD DECEMBER 2 0 1 1 13 THIS PAGE IS PRESENTED IN ASSOCIATION WITH The Royal School of Church Music in Ireland From the new RSCM coordinator for Ireland I’m delighted to write this message to you as the new coordinator for the RSCM in Ireland. I’m no stranger to the RSCM or to church music, having been involved in the latter since 1983 and with the RSCM Ireland committee since 2007. I’m very much looking forward to expanding the work of the RSCM in Ireland working closely with the committees in Northern Ireland and the Republic. I know that the RSCM has much work to do to reach many musicians around the country and to identify the needs of musicians who have varying and sometimes limited resources and requirements. The challenge is great as we try to re-establish the work of the RSCM and ensure that it is relevant and appropriate to the needs of us in Ireland, and not just seen as an English organisation trying to foist itself in ways that do not work here! I’m here as a contact and to coordinate the work of the RSCM, so if you have any ideas, suggestions, or any other comments, I would be delighted to hear from you. Mark Bowyer, email: mbowyer@rscm.com mobile: +353 (0)87 117 2995 Come and Sing Fauré On Saturday 12 November, over 100 singers gathered in St Bartholomew’s Church in Dublin to sing Fauré’s Requiem and Mendelssohn’s Hear my prayer. It was extremely encouraging that so many people were there to share the experience. The performance at 5pm was preceded by a rehearsal and an opportunity to meet new people and to catch up with old friends. We were delighted to welcome singers from as far afield as Waterford and Newry as well as many people from the Dublin area. The afternoon was conducted by Stuart Nicholson, and the organist was Tristan Russcher. Soloists Jeffrey Ledwidge and Rachel Talbot were joined by a number of the choir of St Bartholomew’s Church. Following the event, many people asked when the next event would be. Needless to say the committee will be making plans for a future event building on the success of this one. The RSCM in association with the National Centre for Liturgy will host a Psalm Day on 11 February 2012 in Renehan Hall, St Patrick’s College, Maynooth. This day will involve papers and discussions on the nature of psalmody, the history of the psalms we sing and the challenges facing musicians in dealing with psalms. There will also be some practical discussion of the various types of psalm setting which we use and help participants to come to a greater understanding of the wealth and beauty of the texts and the settings which aim to bring them to life. The day will conclude with an ecumenical service of evening prayer. Further details will be available on the RSCM website soon. RSCM Voice for Life Awards Service On Saturday 1 October, a number of successful candidates in the RSCM Voice for Life Bronze and Silver Awards attended the awards ceremony which was held in St Mary’s Pro-Cathedral in Dublin. Successful candidates from St Bartholomew’s Church, Dublin, St Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick, St Mary’s Pro-Cathedral, Dublin were presented their certificates by Fr Damien O’Reilly, Administrator of the cathedral. Unfortunately the successful candidates from Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin were unable to attend the ceremony. The choir was conducted by Blánaid Murphy and the organist was Peter Barley. Successful candidates were supported by their family and friends at the service. It is encouraging that a total of 36 candidates were successful this year. It would be great if we could encourage more young singers from parishes and schools all around the country to undertake the Voice for Life award. This will be one of the priorities over the next few months for the new awards administrator and the two committees. Full details of the scheme are available from the RSCM Ireland website at www.rscmireland.com or contact the awards administrator at awards@rscmireland.com 14 S O U N D B O A R D D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 1 Sing the Mass - An anthology of music for the Irish Church, Veritas ISBN 978 1 84730 306 6 Accompaniment & melody-only editions and CD Prepared by the National Centre for Liturgy, this anthology of music is a resource for all involved in music ministry and for all who gather to celebrate the Eucharist. In conjunction with the publication of the third edition of the Roman Missal, it includes new settings for the Mass, as well as previously used settings that have been amended in line with the revised translation. Before After A new organ for Killodiernan! A tale of rescue and restoration, by DEREK VERSO When I received a call from the rector of Nenagh group of parishes about the possibility of finding a redundant pipe organ for one of the churches in her group, several instruments came to mind that might suit a small country church in the middle of Co Tipperary. Knowing only that it was a very small church, I sent her photographs and dimensions of two possible instruments that might suit her situation. One of the instruments seemed to be of particular interest and so after further discussion we arranged to visit this organ, which at the time was on temporary loan to St Brigid’s Cathedral in Kildare for use there while the cathedral organ was being rebuilt. Canon Marie Rowley-Brooke felt that it looked right for her church and the dimensions were suitably modest. She was also struck by the beauty of tone of this lovely little pipe organ, even in its unrenovated state! It was a bit of a sorry sight, because in its previous life in a convent in county Dublin the entire instrument had been covered with a heavy gloss cream paint, including front pipes, console, and lid! I then arranged to go to the church where it might find a new home, Killodiernan Church near Nenagh, Co Tipperary. We looked at possible locations for the organ and agreed that it was best under the gallery at the back of the church. The small Church of Ireland community that worshipped in Killodiernan had bravely taken on the conservation of their church (which dates from 1818) and with tremendous support from the entire community had a very successful fundraising campaign that enabled the church to be reroofed and completely rewired, and to receive new heating, replastering and of course repainting. With less than €10,000 available for an organ, could they possibly manage to have a real pipe organ? That was their dearest wish. Following further consideration with architect, quantity surveyor and some members of the vestry, it was agreed that I would proceed with the organ’s renovation and installation. We completely renovated the organ, including releathering the bellows, restoring the simple mechanical tracker action to produce a sensitive and responsive action, and removing all the horrible gloss cream paint from the front pipes and the console area to reveal some good solid oak which was then repolished. Musically, once renovated, the wooden Stopped Diapason pipes produced a charming characteristic “old English” flute timbre whose tone never becomes tiring to the ear; and once the soft lead pipes of the Open Diapason had been cleaned and mandrilled, they produced a warm and firm diapason sound. What could be more suitable for this situation: a simple onemanual instrument with pedals permanently coupled to the manual of four speaking stops (Open Diapason, Stopped Diapason, Gamba, Principal)? The provenance of this little organ is uncertain: inside the soundboard is stamped “A. Monk. Campden Town” without any date. There also appears inside “August 1874 Henry Whitehead Rathmines Road Dublin Tuned and Cleaned”, and in 1907 Telford & Telford seemed to have re- erected it in a new location or building… and so forth until the present day. This would suggest that the instrument is around 140 years old, and now, following renovation, is ready to provide music for another fifty years or more. The Rededication Service for the church and its “new” pipe organ was held in June 2010 when Bishop Trevor Williams preached and rededicated the church. A well-rehearsed choir made up from the Nenagh group of parishes led the singing and Roisin Rowley-Brooke played the organ. The life of a real pipe organ is measured in centuries, not decades, unlike its electronic counterpart. Fi nall y, spec ial t ha nks a nd appreciation to Soundboard’s recently retired editor Randal Henly, who heard that this organ was about to be demolished along with the building in which it was housed. Without his intervention and quick thinking, this instrument would not have survived. Thank you, Randal, and happy retirement! SOUNDBOARD Your Soundboard email soundboard@churchmusicdublin.org post Your Soundboard, 18 Villiers Road, Dublin 6 DECEMBER 2 0 1 1 15 CROSSWORD CORNER set by Randal Henly Congratulations to Dr Adrian Somerfield, Dr Harry Grindle, William Ashmore, and William Yeoman, all of whom won a copy of David Adams’ CD release Irish Contemporary Organ Music Electronic organs are... Thanks to Shirley Wright for sharing her thoughts with us regarding electronic organs versus pipe organs in such an eloquent way. Granted, electronic organs offer a ‘quick fix’ providing dramatic, (fairly) musical effects that are credible enough to the untrained ear. I’m glad Shirley said that her electronic organ ‘mimics a pipe organ’ because that’s all electronic organs do. (We’ll agree to differ on the quality and authenticity of the imitation thereof!) What she didn’t say was that pipe organs and parts of them have (in my experience) a number of lives in a variety of different settings and often over centuries of use. When Blackrock Methodist church closed, the pipe organ (rather than being dumped), was given to Sallynoggin church. In this church (with a couple of stop changes) it continues to thrill and uplift the parishioners with its amazing capability to accompany solo, choral or congregational singing and provide atmospheric music so well (whether soothing/reflective or powerful as the need arises.) In the same way, the organ of Bray Methodist Church had its pipes saved from the skip and tastefully added to the organ of another church, where it continues to lead worship so beautifully. All points to the wisdom of keeping a pipe organ, (or giving it to another church to make good use of it, at minimal expense) . Indeed, it might be an idea for this publication to include ads re. ‘redundant organs’. In this way, the recycling of what are mostly good and very worthy instruments is promoted and ensured. Regarding Shirley’s sense of elation at the capabilities of the electronic organ in her church, one wonders whether she’ll be ’singing that tune’ in thirty years’ time, when (like most electronic organs and other electronic equipment) it will be fit only for the dump. Barry Courtney Organist, Our Lady of Victories Church, Sallynoggin brobaz@hotmail.com Hymns with the young I refer to David McConnell's letter in the last issue of Soundboard, in which he points out that the current generation of children have little or no knowledge of the wealth of Church of Ireland hymns. This is a matter of much concern and I cannot agree more with David on this issue. In Howth parish, I have been working with a few young teenagers to bring them into the choir. Even the well known and 'great' hymns that have stood the test of time have to be taught to them. They are not exposed to 'proper' hymns in school any more, and neither are they in Sunday School. The monthly family service seldom contains any of these hymns. I would doubt if many, or any, of them watch Songs of Praise any more? I have a 12-year old organ pupil at the moment. We recently searched the hymnbook for any hymns she knew; we found one: 'Jesus loves me'. In my own small way, we will, in due course, have her playing more and more hymns as her skill increases. If the tradition of 'protestant' hymn singing is to continue, church organists/musical directors, Sunday School teachers, etc. will have to make a determined effort to find ways of acquainting young people with some of the great collection of hymns. Could the Diocese do anything here? - or the Church Music Committee? In the October 2006 issue of Soundboard there was an article about getting young people to sing; there are several sensible recommendations there and the article can be accessed on the Church Music Dublin website. Randal Henly Organist, St Mary's Howth CLUES ACROSS 1. The Canon in D is his best-known work (9) 6. Organised collection of musicians—with stripes? (5) 9. Latin-American percussion instrument of African origin (7) 10. ‘... corda’—use the piano’s soft pedal (3) 11. There’s an American song about this river valley in Texas (3) 12. All the performers together (5) 13. Sharp (5) 15. The Handel opera that contains Ombra mai fu (6) 18. Fate, in Verdi’s force opera (7) 19. The character in the Wagner opera for oldies (6) 21. Pleasant, gently swinging rhythm in a song (4) 23. The basic tone of an organ—may be open or stopped (8) 24. The Handel opera for La Rondo (7) 26. One of these lively Spanish dances occurs in The Gondoliers (7) 28. It could be a caprice by Tchaikovsky or a serenade by Wolf (7) 29. His first names were Wilhelm Richard and he lived from 1813 to 1883 (6) 30. Orchestral instrument (4) 31. Charles Edward, the American composer (4) 32. Low singers (6) 34. Tonic sol-fa fourth notes (4) CLUES DOWN 1 & 2. Title of five military marches by Elgar (4,3,12) 3. The tree in a Handel masque (3) 4. The nickname of Haydn’s Symphony No. 82 (4) 5. Sir Harry, Scotland’s great entertainer and singer (6) 6. The 1960s Liverpool pop group (7) 7. From C to D’ in Beethoven’s Choral Symphony (5) 8. Where you’ll find Rossini’s barber (7) 14. The Andrew Lloyd Webber musical from which comes Don't Cry for Me Argentina (5) 15. You’ll find one of these in the orchestra (9) 16. You’ll find this stringed instrument if you visit India (5) 17. The American ‘March King’ (5) 20. Handel funeral music (4,5) 22. A short preposition in a finale (2) 23. Repeat the music from the beginning (2,4) 24. The Egyptian god in The Magic Flute (6) 25. ‘But thou did not ..... thy soul in Hell’ (Messiah, Handel) 27. The country in Rusalka (3) 29. Spider product is World Wide (3) 32. It indicates sforzando (2) 16 S O U N D B O A R D D E C E M B E R 2 0 1 1 LIVING WORSHIP 2012 The popular annual Living Worship course in music and worship will be held again on four consecutive Saturday mornings, starting on 14 January Students from the Archbishop of Dublin’s Certificate in Church Music were presented with their certificates at Christ Church Cathedral during Choral Evensong on Sunday 20 November L-R: June Lee Mac Curtain (Year 3—Final); Inga Hutchinson (Year 1); Helen O’Toole (Year 3—Final); Jamie Boshell (Year 1); Archdeacon Ricky Rountree ( Chairperson of the Dublin and Glendalough Church Music Committee); Damian Griffith-Bourke (Year 3—Final); Helen Dawson (Year 2); Tristan Clarke (Year 3—Final) and Róisín Rowley-Brooke (Year 2). Beth Burns (Year 1), Richard Whittern (Year 1) and Róisín Burbridge (Year 2) were unable to be present. APPOINTMENTS Ian Keatley has been appointed Director of Music at Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, a post he will take up in February, Ian currently is Director of Music at Westminster Abbey Choir School. He is a former organ scholar at Westminster Abbey and Deputy Master of Music at the Chapels Royal, London. David Stevens has been appointed to the new position of Master of the Choristers at St Anne’s Cathedral, Belfast. This newly shaped role will involve the formation of both a boys’ choir and a girls’ choir for the cathedral. David Stevens is Director of the Girls’ Choir and Sub– Organist at Newcastle Cathedral, and Director of Campus Music at Northumbria University. He was organ scholar at Oriel College, Oxford and Guildford Cathedral and is a prize-winning graduate of the Royal Academy of Music. Announcing the appointment, the Dean of St Anne’s Cathedral, John Mann, said “the appointment of a ‘Master of the Choristers’ marks a new and exciting phase in the development of the choral tradition of Belfast Cathedral, with a contemporary model for raising standards within an inclusive and collaborative structure. I am particularly delighted that the vision for the future is ambitious and outward-looking.” David Grealy, Assistant Director of Music, St Bartholomew’s, Ballsbridge. A graduate of NUI, Maynoooth, David was organ scholar at Westminster Cathedral in 2008-09 and at St Mary’s Pro-Cathedral, 2006-08. Margaret Bridge has been appointed as Conductor of Trinity College Dublin Chapel Choir for the 2011-12 academic year. Kevin O’Sullivan has been appointed Organ Scholar to the College. Margaret is now in the final year of her music studies at TCD and Kevin has recently completed the B.Mus.Ed degree. Klaas Jan de Vries, Wicklow Parish Church. Aleksandr Nisse, organist, St Andrew’s, Westland Row. Daniel Battle has recently taken up the post of Associate Organist and Choir Director at St Mary's Cathedral, Limerick. Prior to this he was Organist of All Saints' Church, Carshalton, Surrey in England. He is a former organ scholar of Southwell Minster. Robert Yeo, organist and music director, Christ Church Presbyterian, Rathgar. The Discovery Gospel Choir, based in St George and St Thomas’ Church, Cathal Brugha Street, Dublin has appointed Louise Foxe as its new Music Director. Louise was previously the Music Director of St Joseph’s Primary School Choir in Songea, Tanzania, Cór Corca Dhuibhne, Ireland's first Irish-language Gospel Choir, Co Kerry, and the Sheriff Street Children's Choir, Sandymount Gospel Choir and Gardiner Street Gospel Choir, which are all based in Dublin. She has a diploma in adult education, a degree in Communications from Dublin City University and a Master’s in Community Music, from the University of Limerick. She has worked extensively around the world as a volunteer. Particularly with the Jesuit Refugee Service, working in the Kiziba and Gihembe refugee camps in Rwanda, in Borneo, South-East Asia and in Franklin, South Africa. louise@discoverygospelchoir.com. mobile: 085 7201180 SOUNDBOARD is published by the Dublin and Glendalough Diocesan Church Music Committee Views expressed in signed articles and letters are not necessarily those of the editor or Committee ISSUE 25 (DECEMBER 2011) Edited & designed by Fraser Wilson Photography by FW, named contributors, & public domain sources The editor thanks all who have so generously contributed time, energy and expertise to this issue. Correspondence and material for future issues should be sent to soundboard@churchmusicdublin.org Annual Subscription: €15 / £13 (see also p.12) The Church Music Committee supports and resources music and musicians. The Committee is appointed by the Church of Ireland United Dioceses of Dublin and Glendalough Chair Archdeacon Ricky Rountree Secretary Mrs Jacqueline Mullen, 23 Ludford Park, Ballinteer, Dublin 16. Telephone 01 298 8923 email info@churchmusicdublin.org website www.churchmusicdublin.org And finally... The next issue of Soundboard will be published in late March; material should arrive by 29 February 2012
Similar documents
Soundboard No. 28 - Church Music Dublin
Specific dates will be advertised early in the New Year on our website and in diocesan publications. Anyone wishing to travel from beyond the dioceses to attend will be most welcome. The opening se...
More informationSoundboard No. 27 - Church Music Dublin
week learning a skill they feel unsure about using. Failing that, as a first step, ask them to attend Living Worship next January/February. You could come along too! Courses and seminars of varying...
More information